This blog presents news items and resources relating to trial advocacy and the legal system, with a focus on Washington State. It was developed to support the Trial Advocacy Program at the University of Washington School of Law, but now has a broader coverage and a wider audience. In addition to information about trials and trial practice, you'll find notes about appellate practice, the courts, access to justice, and related topics.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Two new iPad apps are designed to help lawyers keep track of jurors during selection and trial. A reviewer says they seem quite promising -- much better than moving sticky notes around a legal pad! Each app is just $9.99, so they're pretty cheap to try out (if you already have an iPad, of course). Ted Brooks, Selecting and Monitoring a Jury on an iPad, Legal Technology News, Jan. 21, 2011.

The reviewer was much more cautious about a couple of iPad apps for managing and displaying trial exhibits. Ted Brooks, Two iPad Apps Make Their Cases for Trial, Legal Technology News, Jan. 11, 2011. One of those apps is also $9.99; the other is $89.99.

Monday, January 17, 2011

The New York Times and the Center for Public Integrity (a nonprofit for investigative journalism in DC) took a look at the industry that lends money to plaintiffs until their settlements or awards come in. The interest rates are very high -- a $10,000 loan can become a $30,000 debt very quickly -- but the industry says they are justified because of the risk that the plaintiffs lose their cases. Others say the practice is abusive. See Benjamin Appelbaum, Lawsuit Loans Add New Risk for the Injured, Jan. 16, 2011.

Patrick E. Higginbotham has been a federal judge for 35 years (N.D. Tex. 1975-82, 5th Cir. 1982-present), so I was curious about what he thinks the plight of federal district courts is. He observes that conducting trials has become a very small part of the work of federal trial court judges -- the average district judge has almost 300 days a year with no trials. While some see this as a good thing, Judge Higginbotham says it is "a manifestation of the illness" he discusses.

He argues "that federal trial courts are now more like administrative agencies than trial courts in their present efforts to discharge their duty to decide cases or controversies, and that we are witnessing the death of an institution whose structure is as old as the Republic."

The changes Judge Higginbotham examines are the rise of arbitration and other ADR, the decline of attorneys with trial experience, the loss of the 12-person jury, and "the drift of the federal courts to the civil law model and their capture by the administrative model." He urges a return to the trial model.

For a very interesting account of the representation of Kaczynski, see Michael Mello, United States v. Kaczynski: Representing the Unabomber, in Legal Ethics Stories (Deborah L. Rhode & David Luban eds., 2006), KF306.A4 L43 2006 at Reference Area.

In Is There Such a Thing as Social Network Privilege? « Law, Technology & Arts Blog, Nov. 4, 2010, Susuk Lim discusses a personal injury case in which "a Pennsylvania court not only concluded that information posted on one’s profile lacked protection, but that login credentials to the profiles themselves are not confidential." I've seen lots of articles about litigators using Facebook and other sites, but I hadn't seen discovery of the other party's passwords in order to read them. Interesting.

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

The best and only way to shift your jurors' focus away from your client and onto your case is to make your case, from opening statement to closing, about the jurors themselves, not your individual client. Only by persuading your jurors that this could have happened to anyone -- even the jurors themselves -- will you convince them to ignore how they feel about your client. Your jurors may not want to give your client justice, but no juror wants to deny themselves justice, even by proxy.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

The National Law Journal reports on the funding crisis in legal aid around the country. Karen Sloan, Perfect storm hits legal aid, Nat'l L.J., Jan. 3, 2011. State and local government funding is down (often by a lot) and IOLTA funds are down. Federal funding is up a little, but not enough to make up for the losses.